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Great Florida Cattle Drive Redux

February 13, 2017 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Following Old Trails, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016

Beginning tomorrow I will repost each day’s journey on the 2016 Great Florida Cattle Drive. Chuck and I participated in it one year ago, and now they made a documentary film about the event. 

On Thursday evening February 23rd, WFSU in Tallahassee along with other public television stations will air this one-hour documentary entitled “The Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016”, a film by Elam and Nic Stoltzfus and their production company Live Oak Production Group.
The film is about the reenactment of an 1850 Florida Cattle Drive, which was held last year in central Florida. Five hundred men and women spent a week-long journey herding cattle across central Florida, a 50-mile drive. Many were in period costumes, including myself.  


Chuck and I were part of that group, and I blogged daily about our experiences–the good, the bad, and the down right ugly. It was the trip of a lifetime.  
The blog posts begin tomorrow with the first post about training for the drive, when Chuck and I initially decided to participate. The entire series runs daily leading up to the film on February 23rd. Each post appears daily on my Facebook page.
If you have not signed up to receive notices from my Facebook page, entitled Old Age Is Not For Sissies Blog, please make sure you do so today. I cannot rerun the series directly from the blog, so there will be no emailed notices. So please “Like” my Facebook page. You can use this link to go directly to my Facebook page.  
Come join me daily and enjoy the ride. It was a wild one to say the least, and I enjoyed sharing it.

A Deer In the Cattle Herd

February 4, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Genealogy, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Palmetto Pioneers

During the Great Florida Cattle Drive  one night at dinner, Chuck and I had the pleasure of listening to some young girls from Ocala talk about the excitement of what happened when a deer jumped up in the herd.  The girl’s group were riding with the cattle, so they got to experience this first hand.  It was exciting listening to them describe the pandemonium it caused.

I walked away that night with a story for my book “Palmetto Pioneers”, and this morning I wrote a brief scene.  It is below and is still a little rough, as I will make changes to it as I gather more information; but I thought you might be interested in how I fit their story into mine.

 

A Deer in the Herd

It has been family lore that several of the Walker brothers came down to Jefferson County, Florida from South Carolina and got things ready for their parents. We do not know if just the men came first and then brought down their wives and parents or if the men brought their wives and families and then sent for their parents. Those particulars have been lost over time.

We do know that Mary’s brother Little James was born in 1826 in South Carolina and that her next sibling William was born two years later in Jefferson County, Florida.

Cattle graze at a rate of about eight miles a day. When driving a foundation herd, such as what the Walkers brought with them in 1827, that is about how fast the family moved daily because there was no way to carry forage for the cattle. The cattle had to literally eat their way over 400 miles to Florida.

This means it took them at least 50 days to drive their cattle from near Walterboro, South Carolina to Monticello, Florida. I believe they probably stopped to rest at least one day a week, which adds seven days. Add a half dozen more days, and we get about 63 days or a little over two months that it took them to make the trip.

Their best time to travel would be in the fall, since it would have been better to get their cabins built before the bitter cold of December to February. By March North Florida is beginning to warm quickly, and it is past time to begin preparing for crops. The families would have wanted to be there in time to plant again.

Below I tried to recreate what a typical moment might have been on the trail as they made their west and south of present day Macon, Georgia.  The trail went from Walterboro to Augusta to Macon, down the Hawthorne Trail and down through north of Tallahassee near Coon Bottom.  These are all current names, as several these places had different names back then.

This is Mary’s story.  She was five when they made the move to Tallahassee.

*                                *                                 *

I remember it well.  Daddy and my uncles came in all excited. Mama and my aunts had them a good pot of stew to warm them up. This morning it was cold and wet, where it had rained the night before. Fall was definitely giving way to winter.

We had been gone almost two months. Last night Daddy talked about how the cotton would have been picked by now. Granddaddy and Grandma Walker were handling it for all of us. We were already missing them.

But today, the conversation around the fire was all about a deer that had jumped up in the herd. The poor thing was probably hunkered down in the wet brush and let the cows almost completely surround her before she decided to make her escape.

 

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Deer were like that. Daddy says that this is how they protect themselves from predators. They just get real still.

One time Henry and I were walking back from Grandma and Granddaddy Walker’s house, and we were walking through the woods pushing our way through some low green vegetation. All of a sudden a tiny fawn just jumped up from under our feet.

We were literally inches away from stepping on the little thing. Mama said that the fawn’s mama was probably out foraging and had put the fawn there for safekeeping. She had probably told it not to move no matter what.

I remember asking mama if animals talk to each other. She said, “Mary, why do you ask such questions? I don’t know. And don’t get too friendly with any of these animals, because that is how we eat.”

Uncle Littleberry, who was standing next to the fire with steam coming off his clothes, said that the poor deer just didn’t know where to go and ended up springing this way and that, bouncing off the cows and causing them to stampede.

He added, “It was wild. The deer bouncing this a way and that’a way, the cows parting and stampeding in different directions, and all of us on horseback not knowing which way to go first. It took us several minutes to get the cattle to settle down and come back together. ”

All of us children were hanging on every word. “Was it hurt?”, said Henry. “No,” said Uncle Littleberry, “it didn’t look like she was; but it sure scared her”.

Mama, Aunt Elizabeth and I were hurriedly trying to keep the men’s plates full and their coffee cups filled. We had had trouble getting a fire going when we finally stopped today. The wind was beginning to pick up, and the temperature was dropping.

We all knew that there would be no fire that night when it was most needed. The front pushing through made a fire dangerous.

We were lucky that the rain stopped about mid-morning. At least least we had a fire to cook up a good dinner. Mama, Aunt Elizabeth, and Aunt Mary Jane cooked double so we would have enough for supper tonight. It wouldn’t be as good as having it warm, though.

While we were cooking, the little kids gathered firewood, berries and anything else that might be usable. I helped with the cooking when I could but it was my job to keep Sarah Jane from getting into trouble and to listen out for Little James. Mama had just nursed him, and he was asleep under the wagon by one of the back wheels.

As soon as the men finished they went back to the herd and all of us packed the wagons back up and began following. My mama and all my aunts could handle the oxen. Mama said that the soreness she felt those first weeks was gone now. She also said that her hands would never be the same again. They were rough and calloused.

Day 7, The End of the Great Florida Cattle Drive

January 31, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

I apologize for not getting this out last night, but I think I had a touch of post-cattle drive depression yesterday.  The feeling reminded me of our legislative session days, when right after the end of the session, we suffered for a day from something we called post-session depression.

 

We weren’t sure exactly what it was, but the adrenaline that we had lived on for so long quickly left us and we were almost useless for anywhere from 8-24 hours.  It was hard to accomplish anything during that time.

 

Chuck and I both were lethargic all yesterday afternoon.  All we did was drive home; all the way home instead of stopping for the night as we planned.  We were like a horse headed for the stall.

Yesterday morning, we got up at 6 AM and by 9 AM the trail boss began the final day of the drive with cattle at the head, wagons next, and riders in the rear.  We headed to the Kenansville Rodeo Arena, our final destination.

The Green Bandana group, my group, rode up front with the cattle; and for the first time I wished I was there on a horse.  I rode a good bit when I was younger, but haven’t wanted to do it at all this trip until now.  I wanted to be up there with the cows and also spend more time this morning with my group.  We have met so many new and interesting people here.

Best of all, though, we got a treat before we headed out.  The owner of the property said that we could leave our gear and tents here until we came back from the Frolic, the event held after we bring the cattle to the arena. This meant the tent could dry before we put it away. Which also meant we did not have to pitch it again in Tallahassee to let it dry out.   What a generous gesture by our host!

We rode in the big red wagon again with Bryce, the young college students, and a member of the press. Court Lewis hosts a radio show called American Variety Radio from Tennessee.  You can read about it here.

 

He and Chuck hit it off right away. Both of them grew up in southeast Florida (he in Miami and Chuck in Ft. Lauderdale) and both fished as youngsters and shared a life-long love of this sport. They talked fishing the entire time.

Speaking of the press and media, photographer Carlton Ward was with us doing his aerial photography from a helicopter on the last day of the drive.  The helicopter followed the herd.

 

He does very good work, and you can look at some of his Florida cattle and cowmen photos at CarltonWard.Com.  The link will take you to those photos.  We are so fortunate that he has photo documented so much of our beautiful state.

Carlton Ward Photo

Again, because of the rain and all the water in the woods and in the pastures, the wagons left the drive to go out on the road to get to Kenansville. All of the riders and the cattle went on the trail.  We met them again at the rodeo arena.

On Friday night Florida’s Commissioner of Agriculture Adam Putnam visited us, joined us for dinner, and spent the night at the camp.  He rode with the cattle drive the next morning.  Our Commissioner comes from a cattle and citrus family in central Florida.

Commissioner Putnam

Chuck and I had a chance to talk to him and when he hugged my neck, I almost cringed because I was afraid that we smelled. Hardly any of us got a proper bath in a week, and my hair is dirty.  Add to that the smell of being around burning fires all week long, and I’m sure civilized people shouldn’t stand next to us.

I wasn’t one of the lucky ones that took a bath in a creek next to one of the evening camps.  Several people took a bath that night, but I never even knew the creek existed until we were several days down the trail.

 

Although, frankly, the whole damn place is a creek of sorts, and I could have stepped away almost anywhere.  I did wash my hands numerous times in little puddles, and I guess that is why there is dirt under my nails and around my cuticles.  My nails are a mess.

For the special occasion of the driving in of the cattle, riders, and wagons, I wore my soiled brown pioneer skirt with a clean white blouse, not tucked in and with a nice leather belt worn on the outside of the blouse. Elizabeth would have wanted to dress up for this day, where they paraded us around the arena in front of the crowd.

We traveled again down US 441, and again we were a parade. People came out of their homes to take pictures, and the traffic waved and took photos as they passed.  We were again escorted by the Osceola County Sheriff’s Department.

The sheriff’s department did a wonderful job of helping us move across the public highways.  They held up traffic on this road several times as the drive crossed back and forth during the week.  When we crossed, it really held up a lot of traffic.  It took a long time to get all the cattle, horses, and wagons through, even though they stopped and let traffic go between the groups.

I wondered if the semi drivers were upset, since for them time is money.  It seemed most of the trucks were hauling some type of agricultural product.  Several years ago when I was working, I found out that more than 25% of all semi trucks on Florida roads haul some type of raw agricultural product.  After all, Florida is seventh in the nation in agricultural production.  This did not count all the Publix, Winn-Dixie and Wal-Mart grocery trucks.  It takes a lot of food to fjeed America three times a day every day, and a lot of Florida’s products are shipped north and all over the world!

Anyway, this is a big agricultural area in Florida; and on Friday morning just as the first members of the camp were beginning to wake up and stir about, a semi truck out on US 441 ran by the camp and just sat on his horn.  Our green group’s camp was right by the highway, so we suffered the brunt of the bellowing truck.  I believe it was some form of pay back from one of those poor drivers who had been sitting in the very unusual traffic jams way out here caused by our giant cattle drive.

The Green Camp

There is a different jargon spoken on farms, ranches and especially here on this cattle drive.  The young women in our wagon are the ones who are coordinating the media. One of the young cowmen asked them what their job entailed.  When they explained, he said, “So you are the media wranglers.”   Smiling, one girl replied, “I guess you’re right.”   He added, “So, it’s like herding kittens, huh?”; and she said, “Well, maybe so.  They seem nice enough.”  You just got a love the lingo that you listen to here.

I spent my time on the final portion of the drive asking Bryce lots of questions about handling a team of mules, a team of oxen, problems that might occur to a wagon that has a long distance to travel, etc.  Bryce as a farrier and drover is a wealth of information, so I got his phone number in case I have other questions when I begin writing the migration portion of the book.

He handled the two Percheron draft mules named Beckie & Bonnie commanding “Gee, gee, gee,” to turn them right.  They were very well trained.  By the way for these mules gee is the command to turn their heads and walk right, and haw means left.  Back is back and a click click with the mouth means forward.

We turned off of US 441 onto the south end of the Canoe Creek Road heading north.  We passed through Kenansville and by the Heartbreak Hotel and an old renovated bank.

Someone said that the hotel was for sale.  It is famous in these parts for having housed thousands of cattle drovers and woods men since it was built in 1915.  This part of Kenansville seems to be a ghost town today, but in the late 1800s it was a cattle town sitting on an old military trail that was later used for driving cattle north to the railroads.  It was called Whittier then.  A sawmill came to Whittier, and it continued to grow.

Kenansville’ Old Bank

Later in 1911, Flagler built his railroad line through here on its way to Okeechobee; and the renamed Kenansville became a railroad boomtown.  Its recently built hotel was called the Piney Woods Inn.  In 1955 the inn was bought by new owners who renovated and renamed it the Heartbreak Hotel.  Elvis was in Florida at the time doing a tour, but no one is sure whether this was just a coincidence.  Here is a story about Kenansville and also about Elvis’s tour.  Elvis’s song “Heartbreak Hotel” was released as a single in 1956.

The railroad pulled up its tracks, the depot disappeared, and the town became what it is today.

Finally, we got to the arena; and because of the crowd we went ahead and paraded the wagons through.  We were just riding, as we had been doing for days, when all of a sudden the crowd in the stands roared.  We forgot again that we were a spectacle.  We waved to the crowd, and the applause got even louder.  It really surprised us to be such celebrities.

The cattle and riders were not in sight yet.  People were standing on top of anything high enoughto watch the drive come in.   Others walked out to meet them.

Chuck and I knew that a helicopter would be following the herd; and since it wasn’t in sight, we took the time to go get our car and move it closer to the entrance of the arena.  Also, we had been warned the night before that the parking area where all our cars, trucks, horse trailers, and stock trailers were parked was a rain-soaked mucky mess.  They had three large Caterpillars ready to pull us out whenever we wanted to leave.

So we waded through the muck back of the arena, and it was truly a mess.  Deep ruts and standing water everywhere.  We had trouble finding the car, because the roads were unrecognizable.  You couldn’t see where they had been.  Finally, we found it, thanks to modern technology.  We set off its alarm.

I thought we did real well driving about 200 feet when we hit an area where we could no longer get traction.  We were done.  Chuck went and got one of the Caterpillars.  They could find no tow bar except in the back, so they towed us out from behind.

[Read more…]

Day 6-Evenings Around the Cattle Drive’s Campfires

January 30, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

Only one more day and night to go on the Great Florida Cattle Drive.

Evenings on the drive are magical. There are campfires and the sounds of the nigh, talking, laughter, the cracking of whips, and quiet horses and mules. At least for now. We can hear coyotes way off, and the temperature is dropping. Earlier tonight, we had a large bonfire; and it was truly needed.

In the photo above, you can see the Seminole Tribe of Florida leading us in their Long Dance.  More on this later.

We learned so much about the history of our state on this drive.  For example, they mentioned tonight something that I had just read in “Florida Cowman” by Joe Akerman, Jr.  All these years I thought the county of Alachua got its name from an Indian word, when in fact it comes from a Spanish Ranchero owner named de la Chua.  There were ranches all over our state during our Spanish occupation

Just before the drive Chuck read, “A Land remembered” by Patrick D. Smith.  This book should be on the “must read” list for every Floridian.    I cannot think of a better book about Florida and its early frontier days.  Another good book is “The Yearling” by Marjorie Kinnon Rawlings who lived among the Old Florida crackers and captured their spirit in this beautiful, moving story.

z1

But I digress.   We got up to a cool morning as the temperature was about 55°, and the wind was blowing.  It was quite chilly,  too chilly for us Floridians.

They let us sleep an hour longer so the alarm went off at 6 AM, but we were awake before the alarm. A horse very near our tent was constantly whinneying. Then we heard someone yelling from the other end of the camp that a horse was loose and down there.  Horses are very social creatures.   I wanted to yell back that I was sure it belonged here near us, so please return the thing so we can all get back to sleep.  Good grief!

Breakfast was the standard eggs, bacon, sausage, and biscuits that we had every morning while on the cattle drive. The announcements though let us know that we will be hanging around camp all day.
There was a farrier demonstration at 10:30 AM.  Two very gifted farriers with help from some others made a horse shoe and a mule shoe on the spot.  These guys are super good.

 

Bryce, our wagon driver, is on the right.  They also talked about blacksmithing and how it was used before and during the Civil War and its importance to the armies on both sides.  It was important enough to the south that the iron cities were the first to be hit by the North.

Otherwise, this morning it was so good to just straighten up the camp, and I actually put some makeup on and combed my hair better.
I am in period clothing today wearing the dark green skirt; but instead of a white blouse I decided to wear a flannel shirt. It is cool and I believe Elizabeth Walker would’ve done the same or used some warmer material.

While I was sitting on the ground listening to the farrier demonstration, I noticed a little girl in a white dress cracking a whip out back of the wagons.  She had on a blue vest with white skirt, and I took some pictures. She was very good with the whip and could probably teach the little boys many of which were struggling with it.

The children added so much to the drive.  Here are others practicing with their whips and ropes.


Yesterday we had to get Chuck a new green bandanna. We have to wear ours because it shows that we are supposed to be here like when we get our meals etc.  They wanted everyone to wear theirs today, because this camp is on US 441 and people could walk into the camp uninvited.

 

We are the North Florida region, and all of us wear green bandannas and camp in a circle around our stock trailers, the same ones that moved our gear and supplied our group’s horses with hay from day to day.
By lunch time the sky had almost completely cleared, and the sun was shining brightly. It was still breezy, but there was a pleasant coolness to the air. It’s a great time to be in Florida.
While waiting in line for lunch, we talked to some ladies from another camp, the light blue camp. They said that we were not the only camp with runaway horse problems.  It seems that two nights ago a half a dozen horses ran away and were running together through their camp. It seems to be a recurring problem all over.
Last night we sat with a group of young girls, all teenagers; and they told us about riding with the herd yesterday.  They said a deer jumped up in the middle of the herd out of the palmetto and was running into the cattle bouncing off back-and-forth. It caused the herd to separate and caused a minor stampede. It sounded as if the cowmen had their job cut out for them. The kids got to watch the cur dogs bring the herd back together.
Historically, cur dogs or cow dogs as others called them were used to flush wild cattle from the scrub and swamps, and the men who accomplished that difficult and dangerous task also used these dogs to keep herds together as they drove them.  These dogs are still used today.
After lunch Chuck and I took a walk around the perimeter of the ranch, but had to stop because of standing water throughout much of the back pastures. We did find the herd which was pinned up next to one of the camps, and there were the two longhorn cracker cattle there.   They were up front near the gate, as if they were protecting the rest of the herd.  I know we kept our distance, though I hear they are still fairly gentle.
Afterwards, we joined a group of our own camp members. They were from Panama City, Saint Augustine, and one man was originally from Polk County but now lives in Georgia. Anyone from out of state is in our camp.
We met a couple from Oldtown, Florida, and they brought us what is considered a delicacy here at the camp. It was a Diet Coke. We haven’t had a soft drink all week, and I’m not sure where they got theirs from unless they packed it in with their 60 pounds. Chuck was thrilled.
Dinner was wonderful. We had steaks and coconut cake. Afterwords there was a presentation by the Seminole Tribe of Florida. It was explained to us the history of cattle ranching by the Seminoles.
Today they have their cattle operations at the Brighton and Big Cypress Reservations. We listened to them talk about the Seminole Indian War and how a lot of it centered around their being able to raise cattle. By the way to their tribe there is no first, second and third Seminole Indian war. To them there was just one continuous Seminole Indian War.
Much of the history was very colorful such as during the days when the Seminoles drove their cattle up to Jacksonville while the Lykes family took their cattle to Jacksonville along the same route. When the two drives got too close to one another, they would shoot at each other.
He also explained that the last United States Calvary soldier killed during the Seminole Indian War was buried between the two Capitols in Tallahassee. Florida has an old and a new Capitol, one standing in front of the other. All those years we walked across Red Square (that is what we call that area), and we never realized what was buried below.
After dinner and the presentation, we all gathered around a very large bonfire; and the tribe honored us by dancing their corn dance which is only done privately.  Afterwards we went back to the tent, where the temperatures already dropped to the low 50s.

It was a wonderful day, and we look forward to the end of the trail tomorrow in Kenansville at the Frolic. More importantly though, we really look forward to a hot bath and a warm bed tomorrow night.

Day 5 – Dante Never Went on the Great Florida Cattle Drive

January 29, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

Yesterday morning Chuck said, “Dante had it wrong. There aren’t seven levels of hell, there’s eight. Dante didn’t know, because he never went on this cattle drive.”

I thought, well, they said that this wasn’t for sissies.

Chuck’s Dante comment came right after he cracked his head on the little silver aluminum table that set right by his bedroll. He bled like a stuck hog and required a quick bandaid. What a way to wake up, for both of us. My alarm clock was his howl.

We got up at our usual 5 a.m. It wasn’t raining as much, but there were still intermittent showers. I had a leak over by my sleeping bag, but it was just a small puddle that didn’t wet anything but the floor.

We must be living right, because I had to go to the port-a-potties twice last night; and the rain stopped both times right on cue. You come to appreciate the simplest little things out here.

We weren’t so lucky later, though. We broke camp in the rain. Everything we owned was either wet or damp. We do have a dry bag, a large waterproof duffel, with our clean clothes; but even they seemed a little clammy. It rained on and off for over 24 hours. Today’s forecast was no better.

We found out that the trail today is so wet that the wagons won’t even be able to make it. We thought that this was a signal that we shouldn’t try to follow the cattle either.

 

Flooding everywhere on the Cattle Drive

By 8:30 a.m. we pulled out with our red wooden show wagon with its mule team made up of Beckie and Bonnie. I called this a show wagon because it looked like something that you would see in a circus parade, except stripped down.

Hitching the mules in the rain.

We watched them hitch the two mules, and then we left the Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area where we stayed last night. We rode down US 441 to the next evening camp on another ranch south of Kenansville. We are truly our own parade. Traffic stops to take pictures. Again, we enjoyed listening to the chatter of the young people in our wagon.

Along the way Heather, one of the girls riding with us, sliced a cylinder of fresh, uncooked swamp cabbage, also known as heart of cabbage palm, our state tree. You can boil this to make swamp cabbage stew or you can chop it up for a slaw.  Normally, I just add some sliced to my green salad, but I buy it already canned as Hearts of Palm.  We snacked on it as we rode down US 441. It was left over from last night.

Heart of Palm, otherwise known in Florida as Swamp Cabbage

We will be at our next camp for two nights. Thank goodness, because both of us are sick and tired of being sick and tired of setting up and breaking down this camp.

We had not seen hide nor heard of the cattle drive this morning as they rode out earlier. We were all wondered if our celebrity walker could make it through today, too, with the herd or his group. My guess is that he will.

This farmer walked the entire drive.

By the way he is a farmer who grows turnips and other produce from Lake City, Florida. He is doing this walk, because his deceased lady friend walked this same drive ten years ago. He is doing this walk in her memory.

I have a feeling her conditions were not this wet. His fifty miles will be much tougher to accomplish, but he is determined to do it.

We ate a quick lunch, and thank goodness we re-established our camp early today. It rained lightly all morning, but it came in heavy again around 4 pm. The tent had a chance to dry some in between.

Chuck and I shared a Jack and Orange and sat and listened to the rain and the cracking of whips. The kids practiced their new skills, even in the rain. Apparently, some of the Cowmen taught them how to crack a whip.

Kids practiced cracking their whips.

Speaking of kids there are several on the drive. Yesterday, I watched a grandfather and his granddaughter riding together. They crossed a swollen creek. She looked to be about eleven or twelve. In another group were grandparents, parents and two children.

Last night we listened to another cowboy poet who grew up in Florida. His poems were about some of Florida’s more famous cowmen such as Bone Mizell, Jacob Summerlin, and Captain James McKay, who was key in forming the Florida Cow Cavalry or the “”Cattle Guard” as they were also known during the War Between the States or the War of Northern Aggression as my grandmother would say. Most everyone else calls it the Civil War.

Florida’s cattle was what fed the Confederate Army until the end of the War, and it was cattle drives like this that transported the cattle north to the railroad lines up near Baldwin east of Jacksonville and earlier as far north as Savannah, Atlanta, and Columbus, Georgia. They made sure the cattle got to their destination, driving them about 8 to 9 miles a day, a grazing rate.

Cracker Steers

You can read all about this in a book called “Florida Cowman” by Joe A. Akerman, Jr. I am currently reading another book by him and his son J. Mark Akerman called “Jacob Summerlin: King of the Crackers”.

Another sound in our rainy afternoon camp is the braying moan of the mules. Many are tied up under the oak trees in an oak hammock right in front of our tent.

They don’t do it a lot and not in response to each other. All of a sudden, though, you’ll just notice a long drawn out lonesome bray. Chuck says that it is the mule moaning, “Ohhhhh. I don’t waaant to be a mule.”  Apparently, Chuck thinks a mule’s life is much sadder than a horse’s.
It was a nice relaxing day, but I missed watching the cattle drive itself.

I didn’t my pioneer-style skirt and blouse today.  I brought jeans for these two days.  These were also the two days with rain in the forecast.  Can your you imagine dragging around all that material soaking wet?  So instead I planned to wear jeans, flannel and rain gear.

Below, we met some interesting cowmen out here.  (This is an older photo.)

 

So which cowboy plans to dismount, restrain him, and tie his three legs together? The one in the picture or the other one not seen at the other end of the other rope.

 

Day 4 of the Cattle Drive–Flooding & a Stampede

January 28, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Genealogy, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

The Mess Tent

Every evening here on the Great Florida Cattle Drive we got an update on what to expect the next day. We split up into six different regions, and each region has a circle boss. We camped with our regions and rode or walked with our regions, and each day a different region moved forward to ride with the herd.

We expect storms and much rain tomorrow.

Tonight, though, they told us that we will ride tomorrow rain, shine, or lightning. They thought that we should not be near the big metal and canvas tent that follows us for every evening stop. Also, it wouldn’t be safe to stay in our personal tents either.  They also said we would leave at 8 am, same as the day before. They wanted to beat the rain.

So after the evening’s entertainment by a cowboy poet, we went back to the tent. I looked up the hourly forecast to see what to expect. It showed a 60% chance of rain beginning at 1 am and continuing to rise until 8 am when it was 85% rain. Oh boy! We were already stressing about breaking camp in the rain.

Stampede

We went to bed early, but about 1:15 a.m. the rain woke me up. Then it stopped fairly soon thereafter, so I quickly got up to go to the port-a-potties. As I was unzipping the tent, I heard a calamity outside.  It was close. It sounded like a runaway stagecoach ran right past our tent. I wondered if someone had left a wagon hitched, and their stock had run away with their wagon.
I stepped out of the tent and looked and listened for any more signs of runaway horses.  Then I listened hard for stampeding hoofs. When I thought the coast was clear I ran across to the port-a-potties. Horses all around us, who were still penned, were noisily fussing back and forth to each other.

While I was at the potties I could hear people yelling to each other. I heard one man yelling in the dark, “Is anyone hurt? Is everyone ok?” Then I heard talking, something about a tent; and I thought, “Lord, I hope they weren’t dragging a tent.”

There are lots of tents in the camps, and most are little pulp tents, several darkly colored. It was starting to get a little scary. I wondered if the rain had softened the ground, and some horses had gotten loose and were running together.

As I walked back to our tent, I passed a lady leading a horse in the other direction. This one had one of those little lights on him. A lot of the horses have these, and it helps us to keep from walking into one of their temporary pens in the dark.

As I watched another person leading a horse, I heard someone down at the end yelling, “Has anyone lost a horse? Check your horses!” So I figured there were at least three who ran away. I still had no idea what they were dragging behind them.

I settled back down and looked over at Chuck but he was sound asleep. All that noise, and I don’t think he even moved.

So I got back in my sleeping bag, when I noticed all this chatting. I laid there wondering what was going on. It sounded like about a dozen or more people were talking, so I got up and unzipped the front to see what was going on at 1:30 in the morning. Over at the port-a-potties were two lines of people waiting and talking. I guess the horses woke up a bunch of people that had to go.

 

Time to Move Them Out

Breakfast was right on time at 6 am, and it had been steady raining all night since after the horse stampede. And now it was also windy, but it was a nice breeze. Kind of refreshing.

The thought of breaking camp in this wind and rain, though, was daunting. We thought it was ludicrous to make everyone move in this rain. We talked about balking, but we knew we wouldn’t do it. We’re cattle just like those bovines we’re driving.

So instead we got a miracle. About the time we got back and starting rolling up our bedrolls and repacking, the rain stopped. We hurried to take advantage. The wind was helping, too. It was actually drying things out a little. We broke camp in record time, carried our 60 pound bags to the stock trailer, and caught a wagon for the day.
I can walk this one, because the blisters are basically gone. It is supposed to be a short day, but we don’t know how much water is in our path. Everything down here is super saturated. So we decided not to risk it and fall behind again.

We hopped a ride on a large wooden red wagon driven by Bryce from Zolfo Springs. Two very tall mules pulled the wagon.

 

 

Believe me, this was the life of Riley after the last two days. We sat high up and could see forever. At times we followed right behind the cattle. We watched them collect the strays and bring them back in. We watched the Cowmen do their jobs.

 

 

With us in the wagon were Edith and several students from the College of Agriculture at the University of Florids/IFAS. One was from Ag Education & Communication, another was studying Animal Sciences. It was fun to talk to them. Their enthusiasm was great!  Of course, it helped that I spent nine years working for IFAS at UF.

The driver and I discussed what might have made up the Walker’s foundation herd of cattle for my book. This is Mary’s family. He and I both agreed that they were probably a smaller species of cattle from Britain that bred well with Florida’s scrub or Cracker cattle and which also gave good milk. We both read about this breed that were brought to the new world by the British and had done well in state’s like South Carolina where Mary and her family drove their cattle from to Florida.

I also noticed the wagon driver trying to fight the monotony of the job.  Every once in a while he quickly pulled back on the reins before his mules bumped into the wagon ahead. Also, the wagon behind noticed that we had a wheel that was dragging. They yelled, “Hey, your back left wheel’s a draggin.” I was getting rich material for the book.
On this part of the drive we drove the cattle through long leaf pine and loblolly pine forests with a palmetto floor. It was especially beautiful seeing the bright green raindrops glistening on the fronds.   It was even more striking with the hundreds of cattle and horses with their riders weaving through the woods, many of which were wearing their Stetsons and yellow slickers. What a sight!

By the way the photo below was by Carlton Ward.  None of us captured this better than him.  You can see more of his work at his website.  You can link to it here.

Photo by Carlton Ward, Great Florida Cattle Drive

By the way signal problems aren’t the only problem out here. I ran out of chargers. I have only one left. I don’t know how long it will last. So when the posts stop, I’m sorry. I’ll keep writing and will post the last days of the cattle drive on Saturday or Sunday when we reach a hotel room and a hot bath.  (Note:  I was able to get help from others, so the posts kept coming.)

We are glad we didn’t try to walk today. It is boggy and there are major ponds in the low places of the roadbeds. At one point I noticed that it came up to the bellies of the team of mules following us.

Speaking of the mules, I just love to hear them bray. It is like a long bellowing screeching exhale, followed quickly by several staccato snorts with a squealing sound as they suck air back in. The two behind us sounded off several times. I haven’t heard it in years, and it is a wonderful sound like something from my childhood.

We drove the cattle through Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area. I’ve been here once before but it was back when I worked at the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission in the 1990s.  Mostly this part was a pine forest with a palmetto floor.  There is standing water, though, throughout the forest.  Later, we moved through a campground with mostly hunters, and they came out to watch the spectacle. I guess we are quite a show.

Finally, we got to our lunch and evening camp. We are done for the day by 1 pm. It has been a beautiful day. Chuck and I loved every minute of it.

Problem is, though, it started raining almost immediately; and we had to pitch the tent in the rain. Fortunately, it doesn’t leak. Unfortunately, it poured from then until we went to bed.

 

Chuck and I got out the camp chairs and sipped bourbon.  After a while, the rain was just a nice addition.  The cracker cattle grazed in a penned area right next to the camp.  There are several Longhorns there who are definitely the dominant ones.

 

At dinner when they served swamp cabbage, we heard from almost everyone that their tents were leaking like a sieve. Our tent is new; but we’re thinking ours will begin leaking, too, sooner if not later.

 

By the way, remember the runaway horses who stampeded past our tent last night?  Well, we finally heard the rest of the story.  It seems a horse got lose but was tied to his feed bucket.  He ran and the louder that bucket made a racket following along behind him, the faster he got.

 

While trying to get away from his feed bucket, he ran through several of those temporary pens where other horses were housed for the evening.  Those horses joined him and the bucket and the ropes and other pieces of metal from the pens was what was clanging behind them as they stampeded through the camp.  They snatched up a lady’s tent as they ran through, but I think they just pulled it down as they passed.  I heard she was unhurt.

 

Wish us luck that the rain stops, and we have no more stampeding horse incidents.

 

Some pictures from earlier years are below.

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Young and old riders.

Day 3 of the Cattle Drive – Tenderfoot Tuesday

January 27, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

Well, we got up early for the cattle drive, and finally we knew what we were going to do at 5:30 am. The night before we thought we might be able to walk along with the wagons, which is always a shorter route in this cattle drive; but now we know our fate.

Early Morning.  A By-Gone Era, A Tree Growing in an Old Cattle Chute

The blisters I got the day before were worse than I thought. The one on my left foot that was doctored and bandaged was nothing, but the two on my right heel that I didn’t even realize were bad until I removed my sock was a problem. I’m the tenderfoot who is keeping us from walking today.

 
Our friend Edith hopped a ride on one of the wagons, but this cattle drive today was along the eastern shore of Lake Kissimmee, a special ride.  Because they waded in water most of the day, the wagons couldn’t go with them.

Neither could the walkers, supposedly; but we have a celebrity walker with us. A farmer walked the entire route so far and yesterday walked with the cattle. Today, they tell me that he waded sometimes through waste deep water but never fell behind. They say he is a fast walker.

 

Amazing!

 
It seems there are only five walkers on the entire drive. I’m afraid I’m the least capable of the five.

 
Chuck yesterday pulled a groin muscle, but today was better. The day before, he went a little downstream of us looking for a better place to cross. I followed him as he approached what looked like a narrower part. He said, “I think this might…,” and I said, “Chuck, I don’t think…” And just like that he went to step across and slid right into the deep stream. I was going to tell him that it looked slick there and deep there. It all happened so quickly.

 
So maybe this day on the cattle drive was meant to be. He got to rest his groin muscle, and I got to give my feet a break.

 
We broke camp quickly after another wonderful breakfast. We hitched a ride with one of the stock trailers. They use the trailers to transport all the duffels and hay for the horses from camp to camp. They took us to the next evening campsite.

 
We got a chance to put up our tent early and let it dry out. We even got to sit and read. We’re in another large pasture but this one was a good pasture, free of briars and boggy areas.

The day before, the field we camped in was full of short briars. My dress, pantaloons and petticoats were constantly picking up the hitchhikers. Those darn briars were always grabbing at me, and my dress was like briar Velcro.  My lower legs got all scratched up.

 
Also the field had ant beds. I was busy helping Chuck pitch the tent when all of a sudden I felt something biting me way up on one of my legs. I went to clawing and a stomping.  Those darn things were in my petticoats.

I liked to never got them out of there and thought about just stepping out of all my skirts altogether.  After all I’ve worn whole swimsuits with a lot less material than what was in those pantaloons.  Just when I thought the situation was under control, I would feel another bite.  We finally got the tent up enough so I could step inside and take care of the rest of the biters.

My Fashion Statement for the Day

At lunch one of the stock truck drivers picked us up and drove us to the mid-day campsite. We got there just in time to watch the cattle come in. It was an amazing sight.

 

The young man is a fire rescue person from Indiantown, which is near the eastern shore of Lake Okeechobee.  He also owns land and raises cattle.  We enjoyed visiting with him.

 

When we got to the mid-day camp, everyone was talking about how pretty the morning cattle drive was. Lake Kissimmee is the third largest lake in Florida, and the area they rode through was where the lake was surrounded by pastures.

 
We met two little boys, who were there with their dad. One was nine and the other one was seven. They were there because their dad wanted them to experience this Old Florida tradition.

 
Both were super polite and very personable. It was “yes mam” and “no mam”, and they could both carry on good conversation. They told me about their Nana who had ten grandchildren, the oldest of which was 20 and the youngest was the younger boy talking to me. They also told me about their morning ride.

 
Next to the lunch camp is a little stand of pines, and up high in one of the pines is a very large nest. It is an eagle’s nest, and two eagles patrolled and fussed at us when we first arrived. Later, only one eagle was circling, and we saw a white head pop up from the nest once.

Many of us especially those of us older layed down in the grass and took a nap.  It was very relaxing, though I did keep a sharp ear out for any runaway horses.  I didn’t want my obituary to have anything in it about trampling horses.

An Afternoon Nap as Storm Clouds Threaten

It was a short drive this day, only about 8 miles altogether as the drive moved on after lunch for the three remaining miles to the evening camp. I could have walked it, I believe; but my smart husband pointed out that the skies were darkening and looking like rain. It could possibly rain on us before we got back, and we did not have our rain gear.

 

I agreed, and our stock driver took us back to the evening camp.
We got our first chance to sit down and sip a little bourbon while we waited for the rest of the group to come in which turned out to be a special treat.

 

We Watched the cattle driven in and all the horses and riders, too. It was a busy time with everyone setting up their camps all around us. They had to take care of their horses as well as themselves, setting up pens and pitching tents.  Luckily, the horses were too tired to misbehave much.

It may rain tonight so we spent extra time staking down our tent. This ground is hard, and I pounded some extra sturdy stakes into the ground with a mallet. If it doesn’t rain, we’ll probably need a pair of pliers to pull them back out.  Those were storm clouds earlier this afternoon, so we don’t want to take any chances.

 

I’m tired of wearing these long dresses, though they have been remarkably comfortable.  I’m a fashion statement today in drab green.  Actually, I did my shopping before I left at the toniest of boutiques called “Goodwill”.

 

I got the idea of simply wearing a long dark full skirt and white blouse from looking at old photos like the one below.

Also, Chuck and I recently watched “Lonesome Dove” again.  I noticed that Gus’s longtime love Clara also dressed this way.
                               

 

Day 2 of the Cattle Drive, Monday’s Misfortune

January 25, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Genealogy, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

The cattle drive was a misadventure from the moment we got up. About the only thing that went perfectly was the alarm clock that rolled us out of bed on time.   Thus, this is how our day began on the Great Florida Cattle Drive, 2016.
I spent time to dress in period clothing. I wanted to think about Elizabeth Walker and her 400 mile walk from South Carolina. What was it like for her to follow her husband all that way behind a foundation herd and dragging along their five children.
As I put on each garment, I tried to imagine what her mornings might have been like.  Did she dress quickly and get cooking right away, or did she pick up and feed the baby first.  Did Jesse get up first and make her a fire?

 

I tried to dress quickly, not just because I thought she probably did it that way but also because it was cold.  I could see my breathe.  I quickly slipped on a pair of pantaloons, a long under slip, chemise, ruffled petticoat and finally over all this a full-length brown skirt and white blouse.

 

I have to admit that I fudged though.  For the low temperatures I added a white turtleneck under the blouse–one that I had worn the day before. Lord, I was tired before I even stepped out of the tent.

 

Breakfast was standing in a long line for a long time; but the grits, bacon, eggs, sausage, biscuits and gravy were wonderful.

Breaking camp was an adventure in itself.  The tent was soaking wet.  It was 36 degrees when we got up with a heavy dew.  On the positive side, the waning full moon was wonderful.  It was like sleeping under a spotlight in the tent.  I never had to have a flashlight to go to the port-a-potty, three trips in one night.  geesh!

On three different occasions runaway horses flew near our campsite.  All three were already saddled, and one ran through with another unsaddled and unbridled horse following her.  One of the horses caused another man’s horse to get a little crazy, and I felt in danger while rolling up the tent of being stepped on by the whirling horse.  I jumped up and almost ran over a very surprised Chuck.  All the horses were frisky and competitive with so many other horses so close by.

We were required to load our two 60-pound duffel bags and deliver them to an assigned stock trailer.  Everyone was throwing theirs in, but the glut of duffels at the door were stacked too high for us to do the same.  So Chuck being the Good Samaritan that he is, got up in there and began moving them farther back.  People started bringing theirs in and throwing them to Chuck.  He spent a good 20 extra minutes there, too nice to let them know that we were not the hired hands.

So that is how we missed the wagons, which we were supposed to walk beside.  We looked up and they were almost out of sight.  We thought it wouldn’t be a problem, since there were still hundreds of horses and riders milling around waiting for their turn to go.  We set out on foot and began our journey.

We thought we were walking eight to ten miles today.  We were wrong.  It turned out to be 13, eight before lunch.

There has been a lot of rain here; and all the ditches, streams, and wet prairies are full.  Within an hour, our feet were soaking wet.  Waterproof doesn’t mean a thing when the water is over your shoe tops.

Chuck slid partially into a stream once.  By then the temperatures had risen considerably.  It dropped to 36 last night but by the time we finished it was in the low 70s.

Riders kept passing us.  A lady named Edith from Gainesville joined us.  She was walking by herself and caught up with us when we were looking for a way to cross a swollen stream.

Together the three of us kept moving along.  Finally, I began to get a blister after about six miles of walking in wet socks.  An EMT truck stopped to help and that was the last we seen of anyone else.

We walked from field to field, through unimproved pastures and improved pastures, following tree lines, crossing into gated fields, and all we had to guide us were tracks and fresh horse manure.  We took several wrong turns and had to backtrack.

One time we walked over a quarter mile not knowing if we were exactly on the trail or not until we stumbled across a family in a broken down covered wagon, waiting for for the forest service to come pull them out.  They offered water and cookies, and I would survive to regret not taking them up on the offer.

The countryside was beautiful though.

Me and Edith

Lunch came and went. We knew that they were stopping for lunch, but we had no idea how far we had fallen behind.

About 12:30 pm the Johnelle in me revolted and refused to go any further without rest and some food.  We stopped under some pine trees and dined quickly on water and peanuts.  Thank goodness Chuck brought a large zip-lock bag of nuts.

In the meantime Edith called her daughter to see how far ahead of us the group had stopped for lunch.  They were over two and a half miles away. We asked for a rescue, and two young men came back in a four-wheeler to pick us up.

We caught up with the group and called it a day.

Edith’s daughter was holding two lunches for us, but her horse ran away and she was out chasing after it.  We didn’t dare let the drive’s wagons and chow wagons leave without catching a ride, so we came into the evening camp around 3 pm without lunch.

I remembered Maple Nuts that we had bought at Bass Pro Shop; and we drank more water and shared these, too. So that was lunch–Maple nuts and water

What a day.  We are discussing just how we should do the drive tomorrow.

Hopefully, we’ll make it; but we’re thinking that we may try to only do a half day, if we can get a ride again.

Also, we never saw the cattle all day long, except until they came in for the evening.  They left before we finished breakfast this morning, and they left lunch before we got there.  Not exactly the experience I expected, but what a misadventure!

I also realized that I had not thought about Elizabeth since we left the morning camp.

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There is a little of everything out here.  People dressed in western or in period costumes.  One young cowboy dressed like Rowdy Yates.  Some look like they’ve been rode hard and put up wet.

We have men who dressed like saloon card sharks and ladies dressed like pioneer women.  One woman dressed like a soiled dove, and she’s quite popular.  Very interesting group. These are pictures from one of the two earlier drives.

Day 1 of the Great Florida Cattle Drive, 2016

January 24, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Genealogy, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

We got to Whaley Ranch on Canoe Creek Rd. about 20 miles south of St. Cloud, Florida a little after 3 pm for the cattle drive.  We will spend our first night here.

Check in went quickly, as did setting up our camp.  Below are our Cattle Drive neighbors. We are in Camp 1 containing mostly North Florida people, I believe.  We in Camp 1 all have green bandannas.

After setting up camp, they told us to take our car to the Cattle Drive ‘s trail’s end, which was about seventeen miles away.  There, we were to leave the car and catch a shuttle for the return.

While we were waiting and talking to a small group of people, a pickup truck stopped and asked if we wanted a ride back to the beginning of the Cattle Drive.  The others said yes and began piling into the tail bed.  So Chuck and I joined them, because someone said that the shuttle wouldn’t be any better but would take longer.

I haven’t ridden in the tailbed of a truck in a long time; but all six of us hunkered down back there, as the truck went faster.  It was a nice 54 degrees with the sunshine adding extra warmth, but hauling ass at 70 miles per hour, it felt like 40 degrees or lower.  brrrr!

We survived and got back just to the Cattle Drive just in time to line up for dinner at the mess tent, us and 498 strangers.  I hardly know a sole here.

The food was good, especially the bar-b-q chicken and lemon meringue pie.  Afterwards, there was music and instructions from Doyle Connor, Jr. and our trail boss.  I actually know Doyle, Jr. from his days as head of the Madison County Chamber.  His father was also Florida’s long-time Commissioner of Agriculture.

Just before we went back to the camp we also met with our Cattle Drive group leader.   Chuck and I will be walking with the wagons tomorrow.

img_3295-2

Getting ready for bed was very interesting.  Thank goodness we brought wipes for bathing, because that is all we will have for the entire week.

We are fairly close to three port-a-potties.  We have self-inflating mats and good sleeping bags for sleeping.  It is 41 degrees, so we should be fine.  We’ve slept in these same sleeping bags in much lower temperatures for trout fishing trips as far north as Canada.

Wish us luck for a good night’s rest.  There are some horses penned directly behind us.  We should be able to speak fluent neigh by tomorrow morning.

Great Florida Cattle Drive–Days Away

January 22, 2016 by oldageisnotforsissies54 Filed Under: Genealogy, Great Florida Cattle Drive 2016, Travel

We are literally days away from our participation in the Great Florida Cattle Drive of 2016. Chuck and I have been preparing for this 1850s reenactment, where several of our state’s cattlemen will drive 500 head of Florida Cracker cattle over 50 miles.
We plan to walk the drive. You can read my first post about the adventure here. We have been planning this since October.
Training began right after Thanksgiving. The first week we walked a mile a day and increased it at least a mile each subsequent week. We are now walking eight miles a day, five to six days a week. That is about how far we think we will travel each day on the drive.

We’ve also been doing it in trail boots. No athletic shoes are allowed on the trip.  Also, no bright colors, which means almost all athletic shoes would have been disqualified anyway.  What is it with all the neon colors on adult athletic shoes?

We’re taking rain gear because there is forecast two possible days of rain.  It can get quite cool on Florida’s prairie, so the rain jackets will also come in handy as  windbreakers.

We expect daytime temperatures in the 60’s and 70s with nighttime in the 50s, with the exception of one evening when it will dip down into the 40s.  We’re Floridians which means we’re thin skinned, so “brrrrrr”.

Prairie in Florida

A Prairie in Florida.

They asked us to wear either period clothing or western wear while on the drive.  I am taking two long pioneer-style skirts and several white blouses. I also packed two pairs of jeans and a couple of flannel shirts in case it turns cool. It gets pretty windy on the prairies of interior south Florida.   Most days, I will be dressing similar to the ladies in the photo below.

Ladies in 1800s dress.
Everything we take including our tent, sleeping bags and clothes will have to fit into two duffles which can weigh no more than 60 pounds each. Our home office, where we’re packing, looks like a garage sale threw up in there. It ain’t pretty.
A few days ago while some of the grandkids, ages 3 to 9 were here, we pitched the new tent in the backyard. It was super easy compared to the old one.

We told them all about the cattle drive and what we would be doing.  Our seven-year-old Lucas finally said, “Why?”  Chuck replied, “Lucas, I keep asking myself the same question.”  Chuck and I both laughed, but the kids looked confused.
One of the duffels is waterproof or at least we thought it was. I spent yesterday patching it. I have successfully patched my waders before, so I feel fairly confident I can patch this too. We’ll need this duffel for the rain forecasted days.
I’ve been thinking a lot about book’s characters, expecially Mary’s mother Elizabeth. Mary was about seven when they migrated along with a foundation herd of cattle from South Carolina to Florida in the late 1820s. Her mother was almost 30 and had had several children already.

I don’t think she was pregnant during the trip, because the next child was born about a year after they settled.  She did have a baby less than a year old with her, whose birth was recorded in Colleton District, South Carolina in 1827, the same year they traveled.

Her children who traveled with her were all seven  and under, three girls and two boys.   Mary was her oldest.

I’ve tried to pattern my wardrobe after what I think Elizabeth may have worn.  I imagine Mary had to grow up quickly in order to help her mother take care of the younger children.

Can you imagine having five young children and a husband to cook and care for while traveling over 400 miles?  That was how far it was, if they used the only trail available to them at that time?

This trail or road went through the Augusta area, then the Macon area, and finally came down north of Tallahassee on the Old Hawthorne Trail through the Cairo, Georgia area.  It is believed that they then took a road around the north end of Lake Miccosukee into Jefferson County.  There were still Seminole Indians in North Florida,  but it was peaceful at the time.

Look for updates from the Cattle Drive next week, but I have two possible problems, neither of which are Indians. One is having service, as I may not be able to receive an internet signal in this part of Florida. The other problem may be maintaining a charge. There is no electricity on the trail, but I have borrowed several portable chargers.

Cattle Drive Photo

Photo by Carlton Ward Jr. www.carltonward.com

We leave on the trail Sunday, and we arrive at our destination the following Saturday with a “Frolic” planned at the trail’s end.  I’ve invited all our kids to come and bring the grandchildren, as the Fiesta will be family friendly.  I’m not sure, though, any will make the long trip down the state for the four-hour occasion.
Watch for my updates.  I’ll do the best I can to keep you updated from the drive.

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